Motivation Whole-exome sequencing (WES) is now being used in clinical practice for the diagnosis of the causal genes of Mendelian diseases. In order to make the diagnosis, however, the clinical phenotypes [e.g. Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO) terms] of a patient are needed for prioritizing the variants called from the WES data of the patient. Computational tools are therefore needed to standardize and accelerate this process. Results Here, we introduce a tool named PhenoPro for prioritizing the causal gene of Mendelian disease given both the HPO terms assigned to and the variants called from the WES data of a patient. PhenoPro has been benchmarked using both simulated patients and 287 real diagnosed patients of Chinese ancestry, and shows significant improvements over five previous tools. Moreover, the addition of an internal variant data of Chinese ancestry and the variant data from the patients’ parents can further improve PhenoPro’s performance. To make PhenoPro a fully automated tool, we also include a natural language processing component for automated HPO term assignment from clinical reports, and demonstrate that the natural language processing is as effective as manual HPO assignment using real clinical reports. In conclusion, PhenoPro can be used as a pre-screening tool to assist in the diagnosis of Mendelian disease genes. Availability and implementation The web server of PhenoPro is freely available at http://app.tianlab.cn. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
BackgroundAlström syndrome is a rare multi-systemic disorder with a broad spectrum of symptoms. This syndrome is characterized by childhood retinal degeneration; sensorineural hearing loss; obesity; type 2 diabetes mellitus; cardiomyopathy; systemic fibrosis; and pulmonary, hepatic, and renal failure.Case presentationA Chinese quartet family with two siblings predominantly affected by cone-rod dystrophy and short stature were recruited. The craniofacial dysmorphism and on-set age-of-cone-rod dystrophy in the proband showed a minor intrafamilial variability. Whole genome sequencing was performed to provide the full spectrum of the two siblings’ genetic variations. In this study, we present the patients’ clinical features and our interpretation of the whole genome sequencing data. After examining the data, we focus on two compound heterozygous mutations, (c.3902C > A, p.S1301X; c.6436C > T, p.R2146X) in ALMS1, which are shared by two siblings.ConclusionWe reported a novel ALMS1 mutation. Whole genome sequencing is a powerful tool to provide the full spectrum of genetic variations for heterogeneous disorders such as Alström syndrome.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12881-017-0418-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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